| Literature DB >> 31311535 |
Camille Nebeker1,2, John Torous3, Rebecca J Bartlett Ellis4.
Abstract
The digital revolution is disrupting the ways in which health research is conducted, and subsequently, changing healthcare. Direct-to-consumer wellness products and mobile apps, pervasive sensor technologies and access to social network data offer exciting opportunities for researchers to passively observe and/or track patients 'in the wild' and 24/7. The volume of granular personal health data gathered using these technologies is unprecedented, and is increasingly leveraged to inform personalized health promotion and disease treatment interventions. The use of artificial intelligence in the health sector is also increasing. Although rich with potential, the digital health ecosystem presents new ethical challenges for those making decisions about the selection, testing, implementation and evaluation of technologies for use in healthcare. As the 'Wild West' of digital health research unfolds, it is important to recognize who is involved, and identify how each party can and should take responsibility to advance the ethical practices of this work. While not a comprehensive review, we describe the landscape, identify gaps to be addressed, and offer recommendations as to how stakeholders can and should take responsibility to advance socially responsible digital health research.Entities:
Keywords: Artificial intelligence; Bioethics; Digital health; Digital medicine; Precision medicine; Research ethics
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31311535 PMCID: PMC6636063 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-019-1377-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1Digital health decision-making framework and excerpts from the companion checklist designed to support researchers [24]
AI initiatives underway to inform broad cross-sector standards
| Program | Goal | Collaborators |
|---|---|---|
| The Partnership on AI [ | Develop/test and share best practices | 80+ partners in 13 countries |
| AI-100 [ | Impact of AI on urban life by 2030 in North America | E. Horvitz, R. Altman |
| Ethics and Governance of AI Fund [ | Conduct evidence-based research | Berkman Klein Center, Harvard and MIT Media Lab |
| AI Now Institute [ | Conduct evidence-based research | New York University |
| Initiative on Ethics of Autonomous and Intelligent Systems [ | Develop standards, certifications, codes | IEEE and ACM |
| Human Rights, Big Data and Technology Project [ | Analyze the use of big data, artificial intelligence, associated technologies | University of Essex, United Nations |
| The Institute for Ethics in Artificial Intelligence [ | Explore fundamental issues affecting the use and impact of AI | Technical University of Munich partnership with Facebook |
| High-Level Expert Group on Artificial Intelligence [ | Recommend ELSI policy development on AI | European Commission |
| Chinese Association for Artificial Intelligence [ | Unite artificial intelligence science and technology professionals | Ministry of Civil Affairs, China |
| AI for Humanity [ | Create an international group of AI experts to prepare for societal transformation | Future of Life Institute, France |